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Saturn Devoures One of His Sons

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Specifications

Title Saturn Devoures One of His Sons
Material and technique Pen and brush and brown ink, brown wash, heightened with white
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 433 mm
Width 272 mm
Artists Artist: Maturino da Firenze
Copy after: Polidoro da Caravaggio (Polidoro Caldara)
Previously attributed: Ugo da Carpi
Previously attributed: Michelangelo Buonarroti
Accession number DN 112/9 (PK)
Credits Gift Dr A.J. Domela Nieuwenhuis, 1923
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1923
Creation date in circa 1550-1560
Collector Collector / Adriaan Domela Nieuwenhuis
Provenance Dr. Adriaan J. Domela Nieuwenhuis (1850-1935, L.356b), Munich/Rotterdam, donated with his collection in 1923 (attributed to Michelangelo)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Material
Object
Technique
Highlight > Painting technique > Technique > Material and technique
Brown wash > Washing > Wash > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

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Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Surya Stemerding

This previously unpublished drawing, an anonymous copy after a fresco by Polidoro da Caravaggio (1499-1543) and Maturino da Firenze (1490-1528) on the façade of Palazzo Milesi in Rome, was executed shortly before 1527. The decorations depict mythological scenes from the first years of the city of Rome. The scenes are positioned as friezes between the storeys, and individual figures, including Saturn/Cronus, appear between the windows on the first, second and third floors.[1]

The drawing depicts the gruesome story of Saturn/Cronus, who devoured his own children in an attempt to prevent a prophecy from coming true. Like most sixteenth-century façade decorations, Polidoro and Maturino’s fresco has not survived centuries of exposure to the elements, but there are innumerable drawn copies of it.

There are other drawn copies of Polidoro’s Saturn in Paris, Florence, Chantilly, Cambridge (Mass.) and Windsor.[2] The latter is a chalk drawing from the workshop of Carlo Maratti (1625-1713). There is a striking shadow of the angled handle of the scythe on the sun-drenched niche in four of the five copies, an aspect omitted from the drawings in Florence and Cambridge (Mass.).

Ravelli (1978) dated the drawing in Paris as the earliest of the copies, made not long after the original frescoes were completed. Given the type of watermark - an anchor in a circle with a six-pointed star - which also occurs in the large variant in archives in Lucca (c.1540-45) and in an Italian book of arms, the Insignia Venetorum nobilium of around 1550-55, the Rotterdam copy can be dated to around 1550-60.

The drawing was first attributed to Michelangelo (1475-1564) in Domela Nieuwenhuis’s collection and later given to Ugo da Carpi (c.1480-1532).[3] The relationship to the fresco has not previously been remarked upon.

Footnotes

[1] Marabottini 1969, vol. 1, pp. 127, 366.

[2] Musée du Louvre, inv. 6141; Gallerie degli Uffizi, inv. 13416 F; Musée Condé, inv. 99 (88); Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, inv. 1959.29; Royal Collection, inv. 904329. The drawings in Paris, Cambridge (Mass.) and Florence are published in Ravelli 1978, nos. 829-31. Another copy was sold at auction in London (Christie’s) 6-7 July 1987, lot 101. Ravelli does not mention the copy in Rotterdam. The museum itself regards the drawing in Cambridge as a preliminary study.

[3] The attribution to Michelangelo is noted on an old inventory card of Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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Maturino da Firenze

Florence 1490 - 1527/1528

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